7/14/2007 1:53:16 AM
7/14/2007 2:36:21 AM
^^ Like i explained in the same post, it's not the issue of the name in and of itself, but what that is an indicator of.
7/14/2007 8:45:36 AM
7/14/2007 11:05:27 AM
I would certainly prefer she take my name... I am a bit old fashioned, though with some persuasion I could settle for either her keeping hers or her hypenating hers. However, I won't hypenate mine, and definetly not take hers (what 'man' would do that?).Now something people haven't talked about on here: whose name do the kids get?
7/14/2007 11:53:51 AM
I am a bit old fashioned, and by that I mean that "certain types of people" should know their place in society.
7/14/2007 12:00:50 PM
Yup, just like noobs really need to know their place on internet message boards.
7/14/2007 12:05:44 PM
STAY ON TOPIC PEOPLEZbtw they talked about children's last names on the front page[Edited on July 14, 2007 at 12:09 PM. Reason : +]
7/14/2007 12:08:31 PM
^ oops just read it.A compromise on the kids could be, if her last name works for the gender of the kid and it doesn't sound bad etc... Make the kids first name her maiden name (or middle name).By the way, women who get upset about keeping 'their' name, need to realize it is most likely their father or paternal grandfathers name first! How many generations should they go back to hypenate it with mom/grandmoms/greatgrandmoms name.....?
7/14/2007 12:25:11 PM
7/14/2007 12:35:14 PM
7/14/2007 1:18:45 PM
lol
7/14/2007 1:32:52 PM
I took my husbands last name.It was hard to get used to the idea of changing it though. Where I'm from my last name is pretty important. My ancestors helped found the colony of Connecticut with Thomas Hooker. My ancestors also used to own the majority of our town and the name is eveywhere. I've always found my familys history very interesting and have done a few research projects on it. I was always proud of my last name and it was hard to give it up.Our compromise is that our first son's middle name will be my maiden name. My husband thinks it's a great idea and a way to honor my family.
7/14/2007 1:48:29 PM
7/14/2007 3:32:22 PM
i knew a lady one time who took her husband's last name of "Bimbo"
7/14/2007 3:44:38 PM
7/14/2007 3:50:44 PM
^ This is where it gets touchy I think, because there are cases where there are no sons to carry on a family name....but that's where the name always comes from...the father, grandfather, etc. You probably didn't get your last name from your mother, now did you? What makes you think that your future husband is going to be okay with not being able to carry on HIS family name because you see it as a "bullshit male property thing". I find it very difficult to believe that there are men out there that are going to say, you know what, my name isn't that important, we'll use yours. And then there is the giving the girls one name and the boys another. You are creating a family, but yet you are not united because you are still keeping this separate based on gender. To me, not signifying a family. Doesn't make any sense. I don't think anyone is saying that a woman's family has any less of a history or legacy than his does...and I also don't think your family expects you to have children so you can carry on the family name. You not giving your children your last name isn't erasing your family history or legacy. That will happen if you don't teach them about it.
7/14/2007 4:05:17 PM
7/14/2007 4:13:26 PM
^^You have reached a moral impasse based on your definition of family unity that will not allow you to understand or cede to where some of us coming from.This isn't a bad thing, people just have been brought up differently.It just means that I can stop reading the thread now because it's run a soapbox cycle and the only thing that's gonna happen is rinsing, lathering and repeating.[Edited on July 14, 2007 at 4:14 PM. Reason : +]
7/14/2007 4:14:26 PM
Hey Fuchsia don't go ballistic on me, k? Anyway, if you have read my posts in this thread, you know what side I am on.
7/14/2007 4:39:08 PM
If I did end up having kids, then yeah, my name would have to be part of it. Still, I don't see why his name would be more important than mine in any capacity. I'm down with hyphens, whatever.None of my other cousins (or my sister, actually) have this view on naming kids, so yeah, that specific name's line might die out. I'm not going to have a child just so it won't, though, that's silly.[Edited on July 14, 2007 at 4:45 PM. Reason : .]
7/14/2007 4:44:54 PM
As I thought. Cool with me!Hey, why don't you have a child and it can be named just after you, and after birth you give it to me, and I will raise it S/he will be on the news in a couple of decades for being some hotshot super brainy super nice scientist/engineer/athlete/artist/lawyer/doctor/businessman/etc... or all combined into one
7/14/2007 4:53:58 PM
I'd probably be too fucking lazy to go down there and get my named changed.And I don't really care what people do with their names...EXCEPT one tiny thing...All you maiden-name-dropping bitches are so fucking transparent. "Oh, I'm dropping my maiden name and keeping my middle..." That's some BULLSHIT. Just come out and say it..."I'm ashamed to be Polish/Russian/Hungarian/whatever. Now that I'm marrying a guy with a 'good' name, I'll be vanilla perfection!"
7/14/2007 5:17:27 PM
7/14/2007 6:22:53 PM
7/14/2007 11:12:09 PM
^Shit, when you get married, you should see about dropping your first name.
7/15/2007 12:17:13 AM
lol no thanks i have no problem with it
7/15/2007 12:19:34 AM
Seeing as few people spell my last name correctly and fewer can pronounce it, I am more than willing to give up mine. I find it kind of odd even for women who have established a name for themselves to not give up their last name. I see nothing wrong with heiphenating or keeping their former last name as a middle name. But to me it seems that a lot of marriages don't last so people would rather not risk losing their name and taking on their husband's so that they don't end up stuck with that name after a divorce. I think that taking your husband's last name is a form of commitment in a way. But I can understand how some women feel that they should be an equal and have a right to keep their names.
7/15/2007 12:23:10 AM
I havent read the thread, but I got married recently and thought I might put in mytwocents...My wife didnt take my last name, and I'm not really offended by it at all. I respect her opinion to do what she feels is best, and what is right for her. We had the understanding before we got married that she was going to keep her last name, but our kids (if we have kids) will have my last name. We both though hyphenating the last name was pointless and kind of stupid. I think in this day and age that if we are two grown up people and really love each other, who cares what your last name is?
7/15/2007 12:35:18 AM
i dont really like my last name and wouldnt be against taking the girls name if it sounded cool
7/15/2007 2:32:34 PM
?
7/15/2007 2:34:38 PM
^woman?
7/15/2007 4:06:30 PM
Some of you dumbasses posting here are going to be single for a long LONG time!!! From these postings-it serves a lot of you right!!
7/15/2007 4:52:38 PM
7/15/2007 7:15:13 PM
pm 3 hyphenated when he married his boyfriend
7/16/2007 9:53:37 AM
I like my last name, and I won't change it. It's not fair that the woman has to change her name and the man doesn't.
7/16/2007 1:47:57 PM
7/16/2007 1:59:16 PM
because of this thread I actually talked to my gf this past weekend since we are planning to get engaged soon and have some more things like this to talk about. she said she wanted to take mine so that was easy
7/16/2007 2:15:06 PM
7/16/2007 2:21:38 PM
there no law saying the woman "has to" change her name
7/16/2007 2:30:18 PM
7/16/2007 2:33:48 PM
^Ummm...are you retarded?
7/16/2007 2:36:47 PM
and i would be offended if a woman didnt want to take my name, but it won't be an issue because i dont date gross feminists
7/16/2007 2:44:39 PM
I think most people can agree that it is the "norm" for females to take the males name. Maybe I'm just old fashioned though. Every person in my extended family has done it this way. I don't know a single person with a hyphenated name and from what I can tell all of the people I knows families all have the same last name.If someone I was going to marry wanted to do something unconventional with what happens with the last name I wouldn't have something against it as long as she had a reason. Maybe her family tradition was different and the female taking the males name wasn't the norm for her. That's a good enough reason for me. But if she was just trying to make a point by keeping her last name I would have a problem.That's the way I look at it. I don't consider doing what is the norm demeaning. If you deviate from the norm in either direction that is when it could be considered demeaning. I don't know anyone who would look down on a woman for taking her husbands last name. I know plenty of people who would look down on a couple for having different last names though. I'm not saying that is the way it should be, but like I said, if you are doing something unconventional there better be a good reason other than a power trip.
7/16/2007 2:50:48 PM
7/16/2007 4:11:51 PM
7/16/2007 4:14:59 PM
^ & ^^ actually, it most states, it's not. http://abcnews.go.com/US/story?id=2778930&page=1&CMP=OTC-RSSFeeds0312
7/16/2007 5:50:22 PM
^don't call out the feminists so harshly. they don't like being told they are wrong.
7/16/2007 6:00:40 PM
^ haha
7/16/2007 6:01:49 PM
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7/16/2007 6:13:57 PM